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A Drone Will Rescue Three Dogs Trapped By La Palma Volcanic Eruption 43

Three dogs that are trapped near the erupting Cumbre Vieja volcano on the Canary Islands may soon be saved by a drone. Gizmodo reports: The poor, emaciated pups have been stuck in a yard surrounded by lava for a month. The volcano began erupting in September for the first time in 50 years, forcing thousands of people to evacuate, and the eruption is still ongoing. Spanish drone operator Aerocamaras said last Thursday that it had a plan to rescue the dogs. It could fly drones over to the yard with food for the pups and a camera that could help operators on the ground find the best to airlift them. Once the animals had some time to get used to the machines, the drones would drop cargo nets over them to pick them up one by one and carry them to safety.

On Wednesday, Aerocamaras' Jaime Pereira confirmed that the company had officially received permission from authorities to carry out the rescue mission. To get the state's blessing, the firm had to complete a test mission that consisted of a quarter-mile (1.2-kilometer) flight with the drone supporting a load of 33 pounds (15 kilograms), which it did successfully. Still, the mission will be treacherous. "It is very difficult, technically it is the most complicated thing we have done by far," Pereira told the Spanish broadcaster Telecinco. "We are risking a lot."

For one, the cargo net for the rescue mission is designed to hold about 50 pounds (24 kilograms), enough to transport one dog at a time. The operators have to be sure to time their lift-off perfectly to avoid picking up more than one dog and having them fall. Pereira also told Reuters that the drone only has 8 minutes of battery life, meaning the trips will have to be meticulously planned and executed: The operator will have only 4 minutes to get the dog into the net, and another 4 minutes to fly them back to safe ground. "What we don't want is to run out of battery when flying over the lava," he said. The expedition will mark a series of high-stakes first. "It's the first time an animal is being rescued with a drone and the first time it has to be captured," Pereira told Reuters.
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A Drone Will Rescue Three Dogs Trapped By La Palma Volcanic Eruption

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  • So, it's a Three Dog Night, eh? [wikipedia.org]

  • by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2021 @07:40PM (#61911893)
    New menu item. I dont get why people who have no problem eating pigs and cows get so defensive about dogs.
    • Because dogs evolved to stare at humans with sad eyes, put their tails down, and make whimpering sounds. Oinking doesn't have the same emotional punch on humans, so pigs get baconized.

    • I don't get why people who have no problem eating pigs and cows get so defensive about dogs.

      I have seen people work hard to rescue cattle stranded in a flood, including people with no financial stake.

      My neighbor has a friendly potbellied pig named Penelope.

      Disclaimer: I don't eat cows, pigs, or dogs. Pass the tofu.

    • Gosh, could that possibly be more obvious? Because dogs are man's best friend. We long ago domesticated them as pets and we have been living together for thousands of years. Pets aren't food, as must be blatantly self-evident even before you wrote that.

      The ghastly insensitivity of this comment is breathtaking to behold. Someone wants to leave pets to literally die in a fire. Damn, I knew Slashdot could be cold, but not this cold. This is the action of a depraved heart.

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )
        In a world where human children are starving people who spend money on pets are the depraved ones. Cows were domesticated as milch animals. Indians are probably disgusted by your eating beef - the meat of an animal they consider a foster mom as babies whose mothers die in childbirth only survive due to cow milk.

        Its all relative.
        • I love how you appointed yourself speaker for POC. Always silencing them so you can say what you imagine they might say. So typical.
          • by ghoul ( 157158 )
            I am really surprised how a small minority of melanin deficient people lump 80% of humanity into one category POC. Understand this -Whites are a minuscule minority except in 30% of the Americas and 25% of Eurasia. In 80% of the world, white people are an oddity. So stop putting labels like POC on Indians, Africans, Latinos, Arabs, Asians all of whom have different backgrounds and life experiences.
    • by idji ( 984038 )
      Dogs are carnivores. Humans don't eat carnivores - we eat herbivores. Though we make an exception about tuna and salmon because of our ignorance.
  • Just based on the article, their plan sounds dumb.

    • by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2021 @08:08PM (#61911955)

      You mean the article that says helicopters can't fly there because the volcanic gasses can damage their rotors? That article?

      • Like drone rotors?

        • by Anonymous Coward

          No, not at all like drone rotors.

          helicopter rotors don't just burr around like a fan, they change angle and pitch. not by motors but by hydraulics.

          Drone rotors on the other hand DO burr around like a simple fan, on a simple motor, and don't have any fine control at all beyond that motor and its speed.
          The drones fine angle control comes from the fact there are six independent simple rotors where each has their speed adjusted independently. All by electric control, no hydraulics.

          The complexity in helicopter

      • I can understand not placing humans at too much risk to rescue dogs, but I am curious what the actual risks of flying over lava would be. The article does say about 'volcanic gasses damaging the rotors,' but what the hell does that mean. It's not going to suddenly eat through the rotors like a vat of acid in a comic book. Is there turbulence or updrafts from the heat of the lava? Does the lava give off a lot of particulates? Crashing into lava does sound bad, but a crash landing into the ocean isn't so
        • I can understand not placing humans at too much risk to rescue dogs, but I am curious what the actual risks of flying over lava would be. The article does say about 'volcanic gasses damaging the rotors,' but what the hell does that mean.

          In addition of the throttle that will make the engine go fast or slower (and isn't used that intensively in a helicopter: usually the propellers in a helicopter turn at a fixed optimal speed so the throttle is mostly used one at the beginning to attain the desired rotation speed and left in position), helicopters have a lot of other controls:
          mostly controls that change the angle at which the blades of the rotor attack the air, so they vary their lift. This is both for the total lift of each rotor (two "coll

    • A helicopter is far more expensive to operate than a drone.

      A helicopter produces a powerful downdraft that can knock a grown man off his feet. The dogs would likely be terrified and attempt to flee.

      • I've worked with helicopters before. It was awhile ago, but I'm sure they haven't changed. They don't have to land and probably won't be as bad as a drone that can pick up 50 pounds. Most dogs freak out around vacuum cleaners. A big freakin' drone landing right beside them won't be winning prizes.

        • That is probably why TFS describes letting them get acclimated to the drone. Starving dogs get used to things that bring them food and don't hurt them.

          At least think of possible problems that are not already answered in the there short paragraphs, or have answers that are painfully obvious.

  • by zephvark ( 1812804 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2021 @07:43PM (#61911901)

    "...the drone only has 8 minutes of battery life, meaning the trips will have to be meticulously planned and executed: The operator will have only 4 minutes to get the dog into the net, and another 4 minutes to fly them back to safe ground."

    Ok! That's four minutes to get there, four minutes to capture the dogs, and four minutes to fly them back out. What could possibly go wrong?

    • by ac22 ( 7754550 )

      It appears that the Gizmodo article invented the "8 minute battery life" claim:

      Pereira also told Reuters [reuters.com] that the drone only has 8 minutes of battery life, meaning the trips will have to be meticulously planned and executed: The operator will have only 4 minutes to get the dog into the net, and another 4 minutes to fly them back to safe ground. “What we don’t want is to run out of battery when flying over the lava,” he said.

      As you can see from the linked article, Pereira did NOT say anything about 8 minutes in his quotes to Reuters. That was Gizmodo's (silly) assumption.

      • Either the BBC (I think) or possibly another TV source I saw yesterday said it would have 8 minutes to pick them up. It's very possible I misunderstood, but I thought that meant they had 8 minutes for the dog to get caught in the net before it had to get back to safety.

        Also, there was some disagreement as to whether it was 3 or 4 dogs. I think they said a Spanish news source was reporting 4 dogs.

  • If you don't know the conversion and can't be bothered to ask a computer, just don't give freedom units. They're silly anyway.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    drop off 50 lbs of food and some water and come back when the lava is done erupting.
    • How are the dogs supposed to open the food and water? Last I checked they don't have thumbs.
      • I just read TFA and realized that they're already dropping food and water. Presumably the dogs are getting into said packages. I may have been mistaken about the whole thumbs thing. Sorry.
      • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

        So drop off some thumbs. Geez, do I have to think of everything?!

  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Wednesday October 20, 2021 @09:18PM (#61912117)
    I demoed, to investors, drones that rescues people and animals stuck down holes.

    It went down well.
  • Drones drop 3 dogs in lava.
  • the dogs already been rescued by locals https://www.palmerus.es/post/l... [palmerus.es]

  • I feel like this may be the inadvertent invention of "drone hunting". Soon, hunters around the world will start using drones to locate, kill, and retrieve game. They won't even need to leave their remote "hunting" cabins. Jack Daniels and Budweiser may even help fund the tech knowing the more the hunters aren't hunting, the more they'll be drinking.

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